I also made an extra large helping of "gravy", the Italian term for a long cooked red sauce. My gravy was in part comprised of fresh basil from the garden, sweet Italian sausage, super groovy olive oil, white wine and and assortment of other fresh picked herbs and tomatoes I canned previously. Not pictured is a loaf of home made ciabatta garlic bread made with real garlic butter and a nice shaving of Asiago cheese. There were also chocolate pots de creme which I had made and allowed to set up the night prior using Rechiutti's decadant noir chocolate.
Sunday Gravy On Thursday Night
I also made an extra large helping of "gravy", the Italian term for a long cooked red sauce. My gravy was in part comprised of fresh basil from the garden, sweet Italian sausage, super groovy olive oil, white wine and and assortment of other fresh picked herbs and tomatoes I canned previously. Not pictured is a loaf of home made ciabatta garlic bread made with real garlic butter and a nice shaving of Asiago cheese. There were also chocolate pots de creme which I had made and allowed to set up the night prior using Rechiutti's decadant noir chocolate.
Evolution
Just some pics. of the silvery cole crops in my garden. Cabbage, broccoli, collards, kale, and cauliflower all
share similar siler-gray leaves. Vegetables with this coloration happen to be some of the most nutritional as well. My peppers and tomatoes are still going gang-busters with new flowers, tomatoes and peppers forming daily. I put a nice compost mulch over the bed and carefully worked it in around the baby and mature plants. Even though I did this just a few days ago, it seems like it's already having an effect on the garden's vitality. My new mantra is, "it's all about the soil". I believe that without absolutely pampering the soil, you will always just get ho-hum results. I also believe that exactly how nutirient-dense the soil is translates in to how nutrient rich the vegetables grown there will be. These days, I am always looking for ways to improve my soil with better compost. I could go to the store and buy bat guano and all that but I've had far better results by manipulating compost and vermiculture than buying "ingredients" at the store. From what I understand, it can take years to finally get a garden bed's soil optimal. I'm on my third year and even though I'm pleased with the progress, I have a way to go yet.
Five Million Pounds of Banana Bread at Midnight...
and a batch of lemon curd shortbread bars just for kicks. I love baking when the house is still and I am left to meditate quietly over rising loaves and the rich aroma wafting from the ovens. Last night I decided to partake in a mini baking marathon which wrapped up just around midnight. I made a triple batch of my family's favorite whole wheat banana bread along with a 9"x13" pan of lemon curd shortbread bars. These are a staples in our house and the husband and kids go bonkers when I make them.
When I woke up this morning the whole house still smelled heavily of fresh baked banana loaves and buttery shortbread. It was an instantaneous perk. I packed a couple of pieces of the fragrant banana bread in to Michael and Jason's school snack today... I love sending them off with an edible token of my love.
When in doubt, throw it in....
Paper napkins
Freezer-burned vegetables
Pet hair
Potash rock
Post-it notes
Freezer-burned fruit
Wood chips
Bee droppings
Lint from behind refrigerator
Hay
Popcorn (unpopped, 'Old Maids,' too)
Freezer-burned fish
Old spices
Pine needles
Leaves
Matches (paper or wood)
Hops
Leather dust
Old, dried up and faded herbs
Bird cage cleanings
Paper towels
Brewery wastes
Grass clippings
Hoof and horn meal
Molasses residue
Potato peelings
Unpaid bills
Gin trash (wastes from cotton plants)
Hair clippings from the barber
Stale bread
Wood ashes
Sawdust
Tea bags and grounds
Shredded newspapers
Egg shells
Alfalfa
Winter rye
Grapefruit rinds
Pea vines
Houseplant trimmings
Old pasta
Grape wastes
Garden soil
Powdered/ground phosphate rock
Corncobs (takes a long time to decompose)
Jell-o (gelatin)
Blood meal
Winery wastes
Spanish moss
Limestone
Fish meal
Aquarium plants
Beet wastes
Sunday comics
Harbor mud
Felt waste
Wheat straw
Peat moss
Kleenex tissues
Milk (in small amounts)
Soy milk
Tree bark
Starfish (dead ones!)
Melted ice cream
Flower petals
Pumpkin seeds
Q-tips (cotton swabs: cardboard, not plastic sticks)
Expired flower arrangements
Elmer's glue
BBQ'd fish skin
Bone meal
Citrus wastes
Stale potato chips
Rhubarb stems
Old leather gardening gloves
Tobacco wastes
Bird guano
Hog manure
Dried jellyfish
Wheat bran
Guinea pig cage cleanings
Nut shells
Cattail reeds
Clover
Granite dust
Moldy cheese
Greensand
Straw
Shredded cardboard
Dolomite lime
Cover crops
Quail eggs (OK, I needed a 'Q' word)
Rapeseed meal
Bat guano
Fish scraps
Tea bags (black and herbal)
Apple cores
Electric razor trimmings
Kitchen wastes
Outdated yogurt
Toenail clippings
Shrimp shells
Crab shells
Lobster shells
Pie crust
Leather wallets
Onion skins
Bagasse (sugar cane residue)
Watermelon rinds
Date pits
Olive pits
Peanut shells
Burned oatmeal (sorry, Mom)
Lint from clothes dryer
Bread crusts
Cooked rice
River mud
Tofu (it's only soybeans, man!)
Wine gone bad (what a waste!)
Banana peels
Fingernail and toenail clippings
Chocolate cookies
Wooden toothpicks
Moss from last year's hanging baskets
Stale breakfast cereal
Pickles
'Dust bunnies' from under the bed
Pencil shavings
Wool socks
Artichoke leaves
Leather watch bands
Fruit salad
Tossed salad (now THERE's tossing it!)
Brown paper bags
Soggy Cheerios
Theater tickets
Lees from making wine
Burned toast
Feathers
Animal fur
Vacuum cleaner bag contents
Coconut hull fiber
Old or outdated seeds
Macaroni and cheese
Liquid from canned vegetables
Liquid from canned fruit
Old beer
Wedding bouquets
Greeting card envelopes
Snow
Dead bees and flies
Horse hair
Peanut butter sandwiches
Dirt from soles of shoes, boots
Fish bones
Ivory soap scraps
Spoiled canned fruits and vegetables
Produce trimmings from grocery store
Cardboard cereal boxes (shredded)
Grocery receipts
Urine - Yes, urine
goat manure
chicken manure
pig manure
horse manure
rabbit manure
burlap sacks
coffee grounds
steer/cow manure
Weeds
sea weed
kelp
Let's see, am I leaving anything out?
Bulk, Premium, Fresh Spices...

For over five years now I've avoided the spice section at my local supermarket like it has the plague. The reasons for my avoidance are many although the average consumer would probably shrug, grab and tick the item off their shopping list. Unfortunately, what most consumers don't know is that the spices sitting in all those tiny little plastic and glass jars, neatly lined up like all the waxed apples sitting in contrived produce pyramids, is that they're old, expensive and have only a glimmer of their true, fresh flavor left.
Because I'm a chef, my passion and self expression is acknowledged through culinary outlets. A painter would deign the thought of using old, dried, cheap, paint to express his masterpiece on canvas every bit as much as I abhor the thought of using substandard ingredients in my cooking. In lieu of the spice section, I offer you this life preserver PENZEY'S SPICES for all of your holiday spice hunting and cooking enjoyment. I cringe to think that anybody I cared for would be looking for their nutmeg and ginger in their near by BOX STORE. Diatribe over. I won't even attempt to bore you with a list of what you can find here - I'll just say that their massive selection, quality, freshness, and, yes, price will have me making a wide berth around the spice isle at my local "SUPER" in to perpetuity.
Overabundance Can Be Good...
This week I'll be planting Maui Onion sets, Purple Garlic sets and Dutch Red Shallot sets. I'll probably look at pulling my still producing tomato plants in a couple of weeks as well. I'll take off all the fruit before composting the vines, even if they're barely blushing. Tomatoes will continue to self ripen if there's just a hint of color outside of green. To all my vegetable garden beds I'll be applying some serious compost that I've been working on for a couple of months now. As I've pulled up my old warm weather non-producers, they have been added to the compost pile. I now have a rich black loamy compost with plenty of worms as a reward. This will be spread around the emerging seedlings and mature plants alike in order to feed them, help retain moisture, dissuade weed seeds from sprouting, raise the soil temperature and help it retain heat.
Cultivating Organic "Super Foods"

More pictures of my fall veggie super foods garden including Malabar Spinach, Thompson Non-Heading Collards, Russian Red Curled Kale, and Variegated Red Swiss Chard. I've made sure to plant foods that are not only eye catching and delicious, but also deemed to be "super foods". Amongst my favorites are collard greens. I LOVE collard greens and what's more, they're preposterously good for the body. The cherry on top is that my kids LOVE them too. I prepare collard greens by cooking them with a little smoked slab bacon that's been diced and browned along with a cup or so of chicken stock. Fresh picked out of the garden, they're hard to beat. Jason can eat a couple servings and will eat them first before just about anything else that's put on his plate.
To summarize last weekend, we played lots of soccer, two games to be exact. Michael did really well and I was proud of the entire team's effort. Last night I made from scratch, chili verde, black beans, salsa, horchata and flan. Unfortunately I couldn't work any collard greens in to the Mexican menu but I did fire roast a bunch of red peppers, jalapenos and gorgeous heirloom tomatoes from my garden for a super fresh fire roasted salsa. I also took some time out to order a few mini-dwarf fruit trees from my favorite Pacific North West edible peddler Raintree Nursery . Fall is an ideal time to plant perennials and fruit trees. I ordered a Petite Dwarf Negro Fig, Honeycrisp Apple, and Blenheim Apricot. These will stay under 6' tall and since we are in the process of re-doing our front yard, we'll have more than enough space to accommodate them.
The Catering Menu

Ferry to San Francisco followed by Thanksgiving Dinner!
After lunch we hopped on the cable car and took a jaunt around, came back to the Ferry Plaza, bought a few additional goodies and got back on the Ferry to Jack London Square. It was so fun!
After we arrived home, the boys went out to the back yard to play and I started making my sweet hubby a Thanksgiving meal from scratch with all the fixings. I had brined hen that morning in a cider brine with peppercorns, bay leaves, thyme, rosemary, sea salt and garlic. After I rinsed and patted the bird dry I rubbed it with butter and seasoned it generously with salt and pepper. I threw the neck and a portion of the giblets in to the bottom of the roasting pan with aromatics from my garden including lovage, carrots, a chunk of onion, thyme, rosemary and sage. I dumped in a little water and in to the oven it went. I also made buttermilk mashed potatoes, peas, collard greens with slab bacon, candied sweet potatoes, clover dinner rolls, stuffing, pan gravy and pumpkin pie for dessert. And yes, it was all from scratch. It was a magnificent feast and we had my family over as well as our good friend Knute who's been making a habit of showing up at our house right before Sunday dinner is served. He loves my cooking and I'm happy to oblige because he's such a nice guy and good friend! Anyhow, tonight we'll be feasting on home made turkey soup with fresh, hand rolled egg noodles and veggies from my garden...
Emerging Fall/Winter Vegetable Garden
Soap & Candy Making for the Holidays!
I also offered, since my forte is in the kitchen, that we can make some home made candy as well. I'm thinking peanut brittle, chocolate dipped toffee and various flavors of truffles... basically all the good stuff. It's the beginning of October but hand made gifts take time and planning so we're getting to it straight away.
Braised Lamb Shanks with White Beans & Kale
I made this Saturday evening and every ingredient for this dish came from our gardens except for the white beans and lamb, of course. We don't do lamb very often, so we splurged on some beautiful Prather Ranch shanks. Here's my recipe:
Rae's Braised Prather Ranch Lamb Shanks Over White Beans with Kale
4 medium sized lamb shanks
1 medium onion, diced
2 cups of diced tomatoes with juice
3 garlic cloves minced
2 garlic cloves smashed
3 carrots diced
3 cups of home made beef stock (or canned beef broth)
1 cup red wine
two whole ribs of celery
2 fresh or dried bay leaves
2 large sprig of fresh thyme
1 small sprig of fresh rosemary
1 pound of dried white beans rinsed and soaked overnight
1 large bunch of kale
3 T. olive oil
salt & pepper to taste
Start by seasoning the shanks with salt and pepper thoroughly. Sear the lamb shanks in olive oil in a heavy dutch oven, over medium-high heat until well browned on all sides. Remove shanks to a plate. Turn down the heat to medium and add the diced onion and carrots. Saute for 5 minutes scraping up the bits of browned meat. Add the garlic and saute for another minute being careful not to brown the garlic. Add the wine and reduce to half. Add the the beef stock, tomatoes one sprig of thyme, rosemary and lamb shanks. Cover and put in to a 325 degree oven for 2 hours or until the meat begins to fall off the bone.
Meanwhile place the soaked white beans in to a pot and cover with cold water. Add 2 teaspoons of salt, fresh cracked pepper, two bay leaves, one sprig of thyme, 2 smashed cloves of garlic and two ribs of celery. Bring to a simmer and cook until tender, about an hour. During the last 20 minutes, add the chopped kale to the beans and cook until tender
Remove the celery, bay leaves, thyme sprig and rosemary sprig from beans. Ladle the beans and kale in to serving bowls. Add a lamb shank to each bowl of beans and ladle cooking sauce from shanks over the top. Enjoy this meal with crusty peasant bread.
Serves 4
To top off this hearty meal, I made a nice loaf of persimmon gingerbread with homemade vanilla bean ice cream for dessert.